If you can't maintain a viable habitat for cacao trees in the wild, maybe you can genetically design them to survive the world that's coming?
Scientists forecast that reduced humidity, caused by rising temperatures, will make cacao trees extremely vulnerable by 2050, threatening the chocolate industry. Luckily for cacao farmers and chocolate fiends, researchers are attempting to save the bean-like seeds with CRISPR, the same gene-editing technology associated with creating “designer babies,” eradicating diseases, and bringing back the wooly mammoth.
According to a report published Sunday by Business Insider, scientists at the University of California, Berkeley and the global confectionary company Mars are collaborating to create cacao plants that can survive in warmer temperatures and drier conditions. Scientists at the university’s Innovative Genomics Institute are using CRISPR to enable them to grow in different elevations while being disease-resistant.
[...] This project is a part of Mars’s larger initiative, a $1 billion pledge to reduce the carbon footprint of its business and increase the sustainability of the crops used in its products. In 2008, Mars launched the Cacao Genome Project, an effort to publicly release the sequence of the cacao gene so breeders could “begin identifying traits of climate change adaptability, enhanced yield, and efficiency in water and nutrient use.”
Yay, open source - does this mean we're going to get designer chocolates with extra good stuff grown right in at the source? Chocolate Kingdom grows a few specimen cacao trees indoors in Orlando. They're a little on the tall side for commercial indoor cultivation, but maybe if they're putting out high quality theobromine and similar goodies, it might make commercial sense.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 03 2018, @10:55AM (2 children)
Wouldn't artificial sources of shade work too? e.g. stick poles up with mesh/netting, remove when the cocoa plants get big enough to not need shade (apparently the big ones don't need shade).
http://www.fao.org/docrep/006/ad220e/AD220E03.htm [fao.org]
But bananas and other crops can make more money than artificial sources of shade :).
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 03 2018, @02:19PM
> stick poles up with mesh/netting,
Stick up poles with solar panels...
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 03 2018, @04:39PM
Apparently it is often found near cacao plants and provides the partial shade they look for.
As stated they are also tropical plants however, and there are no cacao plants that currently survive below ~50 degrees F. One of the more interesting things you will notice looking into plant habitability ranges is that most plants cluster around specific temperature 'death regions', Usually 0F,32F, 50F, 7xF, 110F+, with a few plants that can survive well into the negatives or triple digits, but usually by going dormant.